The latest issue of
Diplomatic History includes an article by
Sam Lebovic, an assistant professor at George Mason University and last year's
winner of the ASLH's Paul Murphy Prize. The article is titled "
From War Junk to Educational Exchange: The World War II Origins of the Fulbright Program and the Foundations of American Cultural Globalism, 1945–1950." Journal content is normally available only to subscribers, but for a limited time the publisher is providing open access to this piece. Here's the first paragraph:
This article uses a close history of the early years of the Fulbright program to explore the emergence of the global cultural program of the postwar U.S. state. While the Fulbright program has commonly been seen as either an exceptional example of U.S. global benevolence, or as part and parcel of the Cold War cultural offensive, I argue that the program emerged from a unique moment of cultural globalism in the liminal period between the end of World War II and the onset of the Cold War. Tracing the history of the exchange program to its curious origins in the foreign disposal of military surplus material, I show how both the practice and ideology of liberal educational exchange emerged from the global conflict with fascism, and reveal the nationalist assumptions and power-politics that underpinned the first U.S. state attempt to create a global flow of culture.
Lebovic has also blogged about this topic
here, at the Oxford University Press blog.